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Birth to Five: Watch Me Thrive! A Coordinated Federal Screening Effort.

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Presentation on theme: "Birth to Five: Watch Me Thrive! A Coordinated Federal Screening Effort."— Presentation transcript:

1 Birth to Five: Watch Me Thrive! A Coordinated Federal Screening Effort

2 The Issue 1 in 4 children, age 0-5 years, are at moderate or high risk for developmental, behavioral, or social delay AAP recommends screening of all children for developmental, behavioral, and social delays at 9, 18, and 24 or 30 months Less than 50% of pediatricians use valid and reliable screening tools Children who have developmental delays are at greater risk for later emotional and behavioral problems and poor educational achievement

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5 Making sure all of our youngest children are screened and given support early are important priorities for the U.S. Departments of Health and Human Services and Education

6 The Partners Administration for Children and Families Administration for Community Living Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Health Resources and Services Administration Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute for Child Health and Human Development Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration Office of Special Education Programs, Department of Education

7 Birth to Five: Watch Me Thrive! Coordinated public outreach campaign to promote awareness of child development and developmental and behavioral screening, referral, and follow-up. Key messages include: Celebrating developmental milestones Promoting universal developmental and behavioral screening Improving early detection Enhancing developmental supports

8 Birth to Five: Watch Me Thrive! Toolkit 1. A compendium that reviews implementation, reliability and validity characteristics of screening instruments 2. User guides, designed for providers from multiple sectors and the communities in which they live 3. Collection of resources to bring awareness to parents and providers about healthy child development

9 Birth to Five: Watch Me Thrive! Compendium First line screening instruments for children, birth to 5 years Pertinent information includes cost, administration time, quality level, training required, and age range covered Reference for early care and education providers, pediatricians, home visitors, child welfare case workers, mental health professionals, early intervention specialists, and various others

10 Birth to Five: Watch Me Thrive! User Guides Early Care and Education Providers Early Intervention Service and Early Childhood Special Education Providers Families Primary Care Providers Communities Child Welfare Home Visitors Behavioral Health Providers Housing and Homeless Shelter Providers

11 Birth to Five: Watch Me Thrive! User Guides Developmental milestones Screening, monitoring and surveillance How to engage families in the process How and where to refer if concerns are detected How to choose the appropriate tool to fit the need

12 Birth to 5: Watch Me Thrive! Community Guide Broad Community Goals and Strategies for Successful Developmental and Behavioral Screening Initiatives and Community Examples Raise public awareness about the importance of celebrating developmental milestones with children and families, universal developmental screening, risks for developmental delay and supports for those at risk. Engage community leaders. Discover common stakeholder interests and goals. Provide cross-disciplinary training to relevant providers who interact with young children in the administration of standardized, reliable screening tools.

13 Birth to 5: Watch Me Thrive! Community Guide Build systems, communication, privacy assurances, and infrastructures 1) Support expanded screening across early childhood programs and providers while minimizing the risk of duplicate screenings, and 2) Ensure that referrals are successful, feedback loops are utilized, follow up and monitoring occurs, and action plans are shared with all who support young families and their children. Improve communication processes across early care and education and primary care. Destroy myths that may act as barriers to action. Take advantage of medical/health home, health information exchange, and health care reform initiatives.

14 Birth to Five: Watch Me Thrive! Resources Information on developmental milestones Every day tips for caregivers to promote healthy development Fact sheets on specific developmental disabilities or delays Milestone checklists and tracking tools Learning modules for providers Screening passport for families Guidance for finding help locally

15 AIDD State Contacts California State Council on Developmental Disabilities 1507 21st St, Suite 210 Sacramento, CA 95811 Phone: (916) 322-8481 | Toll-Free: (866) 802-0514 E-Mail: council@scdd.ca.govcouncil@scdd.ca.gov Web: www.scdd.ca.govwww.scdd.ca.gov Interim Executive Director: Mike Clark, mike.clark@scdd.ca.govmike.clark@scdd.ca.gov Disability Rights California 100 Howe Avenue, Suite 185N Sacramento, CA 95825 Phone: (916) 504-5800 Fax: (916) 488-9962 E-Mail: info@disabilityrightsca.orginfo@disabilityrightsca.org Web: www.disabilityrightsca.orgwww.disabilityrightsca.org Executive Director: Catherine Blakemore, catherine.blakemore@disabilityrightsca.orgcatherine.blakemore@disabilityrightsca.org

16 AIDD State Contacts USC UCEDD at the Children’s Hospital Los Angeles University of Southern California 4650 Sunset Blvd, MS #53 Los Angeles, CA 90027-6062 Phone: (323) 361-2300 E-Mail: uscucedd@chla.usc.eduuscucedd@chla.usc.edu Web: www.uscucedd.orgwww.uscucedd.org Executive Director: Robert A. Jacobs, MD, MPH, rjacobs@chla.usc.edurjacobs@chla.usc.edu Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities at the UC Davis M.I.N.D. Institute UC Davis Health System 2825 50th Street Sacramento, CA 95817 Phone: (916) 703-0235 E-Mail: ddcenter@ucdmc.ucdavis.eduddcenter@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu Web: www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/ddcenter/www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/ddcenter/ Executive Director: Robin Hansen, MD, robin.hansen@ucdmc.ucdavis.edurobin.hansen@ucdmc.ucdavis.edu

17 AIDD State Contacts Tarjan Center University of California, Los Angeles Semel Institute 300 UCLA Medical Plaza, Suite 67-467 Los Angeles, CA 90095-6967 Phone: (310) 825-017 E-Mail: mforgacs@mednet.ucla.edumforgacs@mednet.ucla.edu Web: www.semel.ucla.edu/tarjanwww.semel.ucla.edu/tarjan Executive Director: Olivia Raynor, Ph.D., oraynor@mednet.ucla.eduoraynor@mednet.ucla.edu

18 OSEP Resources Center for Parent Information and Resources http://www.parentcenterhub.org/ Early Childhood Technical Assistance Center http://www.ectacenter.org/

19 What’s next… Survey of Well-Being for Young Children (SWYC) Goals Integrated assessment of child development, autism, behavior, and family risks Strong validation and a longitudinal growth curve that would provide a systematic look at children and document development Sensitive to cultural differences Short, parent survey Easy to access, administer, and score Free and in the public domain Amenable to electronic format and cross-system data sharing Next Steps Validation in non-clinical settings eSWYC ACF Tribal Early Childhood Research Center SWYC Feasibility Study

20 Birth to 5: Watch Me Thrive! www.hhs.gov/watchmethrive Jennifer.Johnson@acl.hhs.gov Christy.Kavulic@ed.gov Jennifer.Johnson@acl.hhs.gov Christy.Kavulic@ed.gov


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